Thursday, December 27, 2018

Connoisseur of Chaos - Fin Times Person of the Year: George Soros

Tea with June, spotted Patricia at Woollahra, swam at Mrs M Chair, watered garden - a summer day filled with reading And crosswords ...


At my age, I’m often asked if I’m frightened of death and my reply is always,
I can’t remember being frightened of birth.

By Peter Ustinov

The famous salmon-coloured newspaper, something of a house magazine for the British establishment and financial elite, praised the billionaire currency speculator and convicted insider trader 
as “the standard bearer of liberal democracy and open society”.

What affected Mr Soros even more was an earlier event when he was asked by a Jewish Council to deliver deportation notices to lawyers. “One lawyer told me he was always a law-abiding citizen . . . and therefore nothing can happen to him if he obeys the order,” he says. “That made a tremendous impression on me. I realised that there can be unjust laws that you obey at your peril.” 


    Connoisseur of Chaos: The dystopian vision of George Soros, billionaire funder of the Left | City Journal

    George Soros has been an escape artist since his adolescence in Budapest, when Nazi occupiers gave him his first life lessons.



      Known as “the man who broke the Bank of England,” George Soros (born Gyorgy Schwartz) is a Hungarian- born American citizen, investor, author, political donor, and philanthropist ...

Agnon's Dog, and Other Talking Animals in Jewish Literature


All of them illustrate the predicament of Jewish identity, but not all in the same way.

FT Person of the Year: George Soros FT


For a man facing daily attacks for his activism and liberal vision of the world, George Soros was in a curiously buoyant mood on a sunswept afternoon in Marrakesh. He had just visited South Africa, home to his first philanthropic foray in the late 1970s, when he funded black students under apartheid. This time he learnt that Soros-backed investigative media and civil society groups had helped thwart an allegedly corrupt  nuclear power plant contract  with Russia.






It was a tremendous boost to reinforce my belief that we are doing something right,” says Mr Soros. “We haven’t stopped having a beneficial influence.” 
Influence has come at a painfully high cost for the 88-year-old father of the hedge fund industry and one of the world’s most prominent philanthropists. From his native Hungary to his adopted America, the forces of nationalism and populism are battering the liberal democratic order he has tirelessly supported. The man once described as the only individual with a foreign policy must contend with the rise of strongmen across the globe — and a vicious backlash designed to delegitimise him.
The Financial Times’s choice of Person of the Year is usually a reflection of their achievements. In the case of Mr Soros this year, his selection is also about the values he represents.  
George Soros - Influence Watch 

George Soros - MEdia Dragon Saint and Sinner 


George Soros: Billionaire philanthropist the far right loves to hate
When the Financial Times pronounced Wednesday that the philanthropist
George Soros was its "Person of the Year," Twitter ignited with partisan congratulation and animosity.







 Flashback, 1968: The breathalyser is introduced in New South Wales
50 years ago, legislation was passed by both Houses of the NSW Parliament making it compulsory for motorists suspected by police of being under the influence of alcohol to undergo a breath test. The newly-formed police breathalyser squads went to work, and in one 8 hour period 41 out of 46 drivers tested were over the legal limit.



    BBC Radio 4 - George Soros and His Enemies

    Allan Little examines George Soros's global mission and why some people react against it.



    Landmark moments for tax justice from 2018 worth celebrating



    From conference fringe talks to top of global agendas, tax justice issues have come along way since the turn of the millennium. Progress made in recent years, including the milestones reached in 2017, was held and built upon in 2018, cementing tax justice as more than just a fad –it’s a wholesale … [Read more...]